The primary purpose of these experience reports and the Annual Report of Accidents
in North American Mountaineering is to aid in the prevention of accidents.Brian C. Jones, 37, on September 24, 2011, slipped on the 35 degree friable volcanic rock slope below the summit and
tumbled down about 1,000 vertical feet to his death.

Jones “was scrambling on some of the terrain near
his climbing partner and he slipped, started sliding and then cart wheeled down
the mountain” according to the Report.

Winds to 60 mph and near-whiteout conditions
Sunday prevented authorities from retrieving the body. Brian Jones' body will be
recovered when weather permits, possibly in the Spring according to Lane County
Search and Rescue Personnel.

Analysis of Accident: What knowledge and techniques will help prevent future accidents?
North Sister is a fourth class summit, approached along the top of the south
ridge by a faint climbers way high up along the west side of a gendarme called
The Camel’s Hump. The route then winds to the east side of a second gendarme,
then traverses across an exposed friable 35 degree slope called the "Terrible
Traverse" just under the Prouty Pinnacles to a gully called "The Bowling Alley"
that leads to the summit blocks. Many groups, equipped with helmets and rock climbing skills, will elect to set a
hand line across this traverse and then belay and rappel the loose and often ice covered gully, to the summit.

End of summer thunderstorms had coated the steep volcanic slopes with ice. Slips under these
conditions can lead to uncontrollable falls.

Six climbers have died in recent years on North Sister, some from inexperience
and a failure to mitigate the high exposure and objective dangers of this old
volcano.

Additional Comments:
We do not know the level of technical knowledge and the climbing experience of Brian
Jones. He is identified by a friend as an avid hiker.

Climber Killed in Fall on North Sister
Near-Whiteout Prevents Retrieval of Body
By Barney Lerten, KTVZ.COM
September 25, 2011

Winds to 60 mph and near-whiteout conditions Sunday prevented authorities from
retrieving the body of a Eugene man who was killed Saturday in a fall near the
summit of the North Sister, Lane County officials said.

Deschutes And Lane county dispatchers got a 911 call around 1 p.m. Saturday from
a climbing partner who advised that Brian C. Jones, 37, had fallen while
climbing the North Sister, said Deputy John Miller, search and rescue
coordinator for the Lane County Sheriff’s Office.

The climbing partner told authorities that he’d seen Jones fall down the west
face gullies near the summit of the 10,085-foot peak.

Miller told The Oregonian that Jones “was scrambling on some of the terrain near
his climbing partner and he slipped, started sliding and then cart wheeled down
the mountain.”

An Oregon Air National Guard Blackhawk helicopter was called in to assist in the
search and possible rescue, Miller said. The Guard crew spotted a body matching
Jones’s description in the search area, but were unable to reach him due to high
winds at the 9,000-foot elevation.

“We were able to ascertain his status from the helicopter late in the day, but
then the weather started going south on us bad,” Miller said.

Members of Deschutes County Sheriff’s Search and Rescue, and Eugene and
Corvallis mountain rescue groups took part in the ground portion of the
operation as well, he said.
Ground teams were pushed back Sunday morning by 50 to 60 mph winds and blowing
snow creating near-whiteout conditions, Miller said.

“Due to the extreme hazards in the area and lack of visibility, the ground teams
returned to their respective agencies until weather improves,” Miller said in a news release Sunday.
Copyright 2011 KTVZ. All rights reserved.

Selected Comment from 10
by bombchaser"Part of the problem is we need to stop calling this
hiking, it is climbing. The North Sister is not a hike, it is a climb. And a
very hazardous one at that."

A Eugene man is speaking out and remembering one of his best friends after
witnessing him fall to his death in Oregon Cascades over the weekend. Brian
Jones, 37, of Eugene died Saturday, September 24th, 2011, when he fell on the
west side of the North Sister Mountain.

Friends for 4 years, Brian was hiking the mountain with another Eugene man named
Dennis Witten. Over the last few years, both Witten and Jones had hiked through
much of the Sisters Wilderness, even scaling the South and Middle Sisters.

This weekend was the first trip the two had ever taken to the North Sister
though, and one Witten says they underestimated.

The fall happened around 1 p.m. Saturday afternoon, about 6-and-a-half hours
into their trip. When the two were near the Summit, they reached a free climb
area.

Jones was about 5 to 8 feet from the bottom of the climb when he lost his grip
and hit a steep gravel slope. The impact caused a rock slide that dragged Jones
off the mountain and a sheer cliff face. Jones fell around 500 feet.

After Jones fell, Witten went to get help, but didn’t get an answer when he
called for Brian.

“I called to him and yelled his name and there was no movement, and I stayed
there for about 10 minutes unsure of what to do,” said Witten.

“My heart told me go to him but it was definitely life threatening,” said
Witten.

He eventually ran two hours back to a trail where he met with the Deschutes
County Sheriff's Office. A hiker he met along the way back to the trail called
9-1-1.

The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office contacted Lane County after determining
that Jones fell within the eastern border of Lane County. The Lane County
Sheriff’s Office Search and Rescue later confirmed that Jones was deceased.

Witten says he will not forget his hiking memories with Jones. On his character,
Witten says Jones was a funny, adventurous and hardworking father of three.

“Brian lost his life, but he lost it doing something that he loved, and that's
really bitter sweet and the lining there is really thin…” said Witten.

“I don't know what as far as scaling mountains is going to be like in the near
future, but you know this is something I am going to continue to do, and I know
that if the roles were reversed and I know I was the one who lost my life, that
he would also continue to do the same,” said Witten.

Witten says the two were more prepared for hiking, more so than climbing, saying
the two did not have all of the safety gear they likely should have carried.
They also planned for a 13 hour day, but the hike took them much longer because
of all of the loose rock.

“Hiking the South Sister and the Middle Sister was nothing compared to the
geology of the North Sister,” said Witten. “(It) is extremely dangerous and I
just want to point out that if you hike the North Sister to be extremely careful
and to allow yourself much more time than you need.”

Jones was 1992 graduate of Springfield High School. According to friends, he had
worked at Marathon Coach in Coburg. More recently he was back in school,
studying business at the University of Oregon with a plan on graduating by the
end of the 2012 school year.

He leaves behind three kids and a longtime girlfriend who friends say he was
planning on marrying in early 2012.

Lane County Search and Rescue is trying recover Jones’ body, however, poor
weather conditions have hampered efforts so far.

Family members have set up a memorial fund called the “Brian C Jones Memorial
Fund” at Pacific Continental bank branches, with the money going to Brian’s
three kids. A memorial service is set for Saturday, October 1st, 2011, at 1 p.m.
at the HEDCO building on the U of O campus.

Another effort to recover the body of a Eugene man who suffered a fatal fall
while climbing the North Sister did manage to find him Thursday, but rockfalls
made it too dangerous to proceed, authorities said, so they will have to to wait
until after next spring’s snowmelt to return and try once again.

Brian C. Jones, 37, fell near the summit of North Sister while climbing with a
friend last Saturday. On Thursday, Lane County Search and Rescue returned to the
peak to try to recover the body of Jones, spotted by a National Guard Blackhawk
helicopter crew hours after the incident, said John Miller, search and rescue
coordinator for the sheriff’s office.

A sheriff’s helicopter supervised and helped with the search by air while two
teams of Eugene Mountain Rescue members searched for Jones from various
locations, including the summit ridge and westside gulley ridges, Miller said.

Other search and rescue members assisted with radio communications and incident
management, he said.

Search teams found Jones’s body, but were unable to recover him due to extreme
rockfall hazard within the gulley, Miller said. Several “volleys” of rock debris
were seen coming down the gulley during the search, he said, noting that the
gully is known as the “Bowling Alley due to the way loose rock from upper
reaches is funneled into it.

Search and rescue teams plan to return to the area after winter snow and summer
melt-off, Miller said, to see if the body has moved down to a location safer to
access by recovery teams.
Copyright 2011 KTVZ. All rights reserved.